Producción CyT

Fermentation of pomegranate juice by lactic acid bacteria and its biological effect on mice fed a high-fat diet

Artículo

Autoría:

Isas Ana Sofía ; Escobar F ; Alvarez Villamil Eduardo ; MOLINA, VERONICA CAROLINA ; Mateos Briz Raquel ; Lizarraga Emilio ; Mozzi Fernanda ; Van Nieuwenhove Carina

Fecha:

2023

Editorial y Lugar de Edición:

Elsevier

Revista:

Food Bioscience - ISSN 2212-4292
Elsevier

ISSN:

2212-4292

Resumen *

This study investigated the ability of Lactiplantibacillus paraplantarum CRL2051 and Lactiplantibacillus plantarum CRL2030, two lactic acid bacteria isolated from fruits, to ferment pomegranate juice to produce beverages with extended shelf life and functional properties. Lactic acid bacteria consumed glucose and fructose as carbon sources, producing mainly lactic acid. Both strains were initially grown in juice at 30 ◦C for 48 h, then refrigerated at 4 ◦C for 28 days. During fermentation and cold storage, the total phenolic content and antioxidant capacity were conserved in fermented pomegranate juices. The functionality studies of the fermented beverages administered to C57BL/6 mice fed a high-fat diet were evaluated over 6 weeks. Pomegranate juice supplementation led to a marked improvement in glucose and triglycerides serum profile, which decreased around 40% and up to 48%, respectively, and counteracted fat deposition and body weight gain. The high-fat diet treatment significantly incremented the aspartate aminotransferase activity in the liver, whereas fermented pomegranate juice consumption slightly reduced it. Liver histological changes associated with a high-fat diet were significantly reverted in juice-treated animals. Our findings evidenced the biological benefits of a novel functional beverageobtained by lactic fermentation of pomegranate juice; this functional drink may protect against weight gain, liver damage, and dyslipidemia induced by a high-fat diet consumption. Información suministrada por el agente en SIGEVA

Palabras Clave

PROMEGRANATEFUNCTIONAL BEVERAGEFERMENTATIONLACTIC ACID BACTERIA